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Salisbury Middle School Teacher Seeks Cure For Ailing Son

The Race for Adam Foundation will hold 5K race May 7 to raise money to help find a cure for rare Niemann-Pick Type C.

With his wavy blond hair, big blue eyes and healthy glow, 12-year-old Adam Recke appears to be the picture of health. He loves to play sports and listen to music.

But Adam has Niemann-Pick Type C,  a rare and fatal neural degenerative disease most people have never heard of and for which there is no cure--- yet. 

“It’s more than a rare disease, it’s an ultra rare disease,” said Adam's father, Sean, a technology teacher at Salisbury Middle School.

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“To be considered a rare disease in the United States, the disease has to affect less than 200,000 people. Niemann-Pick affects less than 200 people in the U.S. and it only affects five families in Pennsylvania,” Recke said.

People with Niemann-Pick Type C are unable to metabolize cholesterol and other lipids properly within their cells. As a result, excessive amounts of cholesterol accumulate within the liver and spleen and excessive amounts of other lipids accumulate in the brain. Most children with the disease die before age 20.

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When Recke's  colleagues at Salisbury Middle School learned of his son's devastating disease, it spurred them to action.

In 2005,  Matt Tobias,  a social studies teacher at Salisbury Middle School, created the Race for Adam Foundation to help raise money to find a cure for Niemann-Pick Type C. On Saturday, May 7, the organization will hold the sixth annual at Lehigh Parkway in Allentown. The event will feature live music, food and raffles. Participants in the race will get a T-shirt that says "I believe," designed by, a ninth-grader at Salisbury Middle School.

Scott Marshal, an instructional aide at Salisbury Middle School who is also a singer/songwriter, was inspired by Adam and wrote and recorded a song about him, titled “With Every New Day (I believe).”

“Adam is a really special kid—full of life, full of love, full of all the good things and all the wonderful things that make being a kid great,” Marshall said, tears brimming in his eyes.

While recording his album, Marshall mentioned the song to the producer. Management then told Marshall they wanted to release song. The song is available for 99 cents on iTunes and all proceeds benefit the Race for Adam Foundation.

“We really  hope to raise awareness. If enough people buy it, it’ll chart on the Billboard charts.  This could open doors for national exposure to Adam’s story.” Marshall said.

“It’s all about finding a cure,” he said.

Salisbury Middle School has rallied behind the Reckes, organizing various fundraisers over the years, often in the spirit of fun, with outrageous contests, such as the time some teachers slept outside and others shaved their heads. The school has posted numerous collection jars. In addition to the "I believe" T-shirt, they also sell two one that says “persevere”  to raise money to find a cure for Niemann-Pick Type C.

It has not been an easy journey for Sean and his wife, Amy, and their two other children, Josh, 16, and Katie, 14,  who live in Bethlehem Township.  It took six years for Adam to be diagnosed, even though Sean and Amy knew right away that he was ill.

Adam was jaundiced when he was born, but doctors told the Reckes it was nothing to worry about and to expose Adam to sunlight. After taking Adam to the hospital the fourth time, the doctor finally drew blood. When the results came back, the Reckes were told to take Adam immediately to St. Christopher’s Hospital for Children in Philadelphia.

“His liver was so out of whack he almost died," said Sean Recke. "They didn’t tell us until after we left.”

At that time, Adam was misdiagnosed with neonatal hepatitis. From there, the Reckes kept taking Adam from hospital to hospital looking for answers. Finally, when Adam was 6, doctors performed a skin biopsy and confirmed the diagnosis of Niemann-Pick Type C.

With a mix of anger and sadness on his face, Recke recalled the day he and his wife were given the diagnosis.  The doctor, with no bedside manner, told the couple to take Adam home because there was nothing he could do for them. He coldly told them there was no way the family could afford an experimental treatment. To make matters worse,  the doctor could not find Adam’s medical paperwork, Recke recalled.

Although devastated, the Reckes did not give up hope. They researched the disease and found doctors with more knowledge about the disease, such as Dr. Marc Patterson, a pediatric neurologist at the Mayo Clinic, who has been trying to find a cure for the last six years.

Always looking for ways to help his son, Sean Recke attended a U.S. Food and Drug Administration panel on an experimental drug for Niemann-Pick Type C. Although approved in other countries, the FDA did not approve the drug due to the side effects--- diarrhea and bone growth issues.

Despite the lack of FDA approval, Adam takes this medication and does not suffer any side effects, Recke said.

 Adam, now a sixth-grader at East Hills Middle School in Bethlehem, is doing well, his father said.  Beaming with pride, he said Adam is popular and always smiling.

“He is living life to the fullest,” Recke  said.

For more information, visit www.raceforadam.org.

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